President Biden talks COVID, climate and Afghanistan at UN
While speaking at the United Nations General Assembly, President Biden said the international community is "at an inflection point in history."
Associated Press, USA TODAY
Right-wing demonstrators headed to the nations capital on Sept. 18 to express their support for the individuals federally charged in connection with the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.
There were more police officers and reporters than protesters who attended the Justice for J6 rally, and officials reported just four arrests. But as law enforcementbraced for the possibility ofviolence ahead of thedemonstration, a warning went viral on social media claiming that swearing at the president might be illegal.
Its Not Just Dangerous; Screaming F*** Biden May Also Be Illegal, reads the headline of a purported Sept. 14 news article, which was shared to Instagram on Sept. 16. The post accumulated more than 2,000likeswithin less than a week.
Text below the headline reads, Experts warn that in addition to the violent incitement caused by screaming expletives at the president, such threats may also be criminal.
Pages on Facebook such as The Typical Liberal and Young Americans for Liberty shared similar versions of the claim, whileothers claimed the article was satirical.
However, the article is not authentic, and legal experts who spoke with USA TODAY said using profanity when speaking about thepresident is protected by the Constitution.
"There is no law preventing Americans from yelling profanities at the president of the United States," said KenPaulson,director of the Free Speech Center at the College of Media and Entertainment at Middle Tennessee State University.
Fact check: Biden's approval rating is higher than Trump's term low
The pages that shared the post did not return requests for comment.
A search of the headline included in the posts leads to memes on iFunny and online forums. The author of the text, who goes under the name "Eugene Bischvetz," first shared the screenshot of the text toInstagram on Sept. 15.
The social media pages for the account "Eugene Bischvetz" feature satirical contentand memes, and thescreenshot circulating online is not alegitimate news report.
Meanwhile, legal experts say using profanity when speaking about the president or public officials is not illegal, as the posts claim.
"Cursing at the president is protected speech under the First Amendment," said Robert Richards,founding director of the Pennsylvania Center forthe First Amendment at Penn State.
Richards pointed to the1971 Cohen v. California Supreme Court case, in which a man had the F-word emblazoned on a jacket, and wore it in a courthouse to show his contempt for the military draft.
"The court expressed concern that, if the government could criminalize such expression, it could do so as a guise for suppressing unpopular views," Richards said via email.
The court ruled the man had a right to say it, and in his opinion,Justice John Marshall Harlan wrote,"One man's vulgarity is another's lyric."
Clay Calvert, a professor of law and director of the Marion B. Brechner First Amendment Project at the University of Florida, also referenced the Cohen case.
"At the heart of the First Amendment is the ability to freely criticize both government officials and government policies," Calvert said via email. "The U.S. Supreme Court has made it clear that what it calls the 'emotive' function of speech merits constitutional protection."
Calvert said as long as the speech does not amount to what courts calla "true threat" of violence, then it is protected.
"In brief, it's completely legal to swear about the president of the United States," he said."It is not legal, however, to threaten the president of the United States."
Eugene Volokh, a professor of law at UCLA, noted there could be some cases where profanity toward a president might be unprotected.
"If you shouted it in a library, you might be disturbing the peace," Volokh said. "If you were to actually come up to Biden and say, Fyou, that might be so-called fighting words,personally addressed insults that are likely to start a fight."
Fact check: Biden can't mandate vaccinations for Congress; order covers executive branch only
In recent local controversies, attorneys have found that casesinvolving swear words and the president are protected speech.
For example, in February, assistant city of Fargo attorney Alissa Farolsaid a homeowner'sflag in North Dakota that used profanity against President Joe Biden was protected by the First Amendment. A similar situation took place in New Philadelphia, Ohio, where a law director told city council members the city could not do anything about a banner that used an expletive to attack Biden.
Based on our research, we rate FALSE the claim that swearing at the president may be illegal. Legal experts say cursing the president is protected by the First Amendment of the Constitution unless someone is disturbing the peace,using fight words, or making a direct threat to the president. Further, the headline seen in the posts is not an authentic news report.
Thank you for supporting our journalism. You can subscribe to our print edition, ad-free app, or electronic newspaper replica here.
Our fact-check work is supported in part by a grant from Facebook.
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